Southport killer's parents 'desperately sorry'
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Alphonse Rudakubana tells the inquiry he believes the 29 July attack would not have happened had he told the authorities.
The father of the Southport killer has told the public inquiry he regrets not calling the police after he accepted a delivery of a machete his son had ordered.
Police are struggling to cope with a surge in potentially violent teenagers being referred to Britain’s counterterrorism programme Prevent as cases reach a record high in the wake of the Southport attack.
An inquiry hears Rudakubana did not leave home alone for more than two years before carrying out the attack. Axel Rudakubana's father has said he is "desperately sorry" for failing to challenge his son's violent behaviour over the years before the Southport attack.
Thirteen people were stabbed, two fatally, during a “major incident” at a children’s event space where a “Taylor Swift Yoga and Dance Workshop” took place in England Monday. Authorities said two children were killed in the bloodshed that also ...